Psittacine Beak And Feather Disease
Marie Kubiak BVSc MRCVS
PBFD is a viral infection believed to affect all parrot species, causing
progressive damage to growing feathers and the germinal epithelium of the beak and
claws. Concurrent immunosuppression is a common debilitating factor in infected
birds and results in potentially fatal secondary infections. Clinical disease was first
reported in 1888 in wild red-rumped parrots showing feather and beak changes, but
the virus responsible was not identified until the late 1980s2. PBFD is known to be
well established in wild parrot flocks, with 20% of cockatoo flocks in Australia
showing clinical signs and a seroprevalence within flocks of 60-80%1. Capture of
wild birds for the pet trade has lead to spread of the virus within captive collections
worldwide and disease has been reported in over sixty psittacine species. Several
virus strains are seen that may be species specific.
PBFD is caused by a circovirus which is very stable in the environment,
resistant to many disinfectants and able to remain infectious for years. Natural
infection can occur by inhalation of contaminated feather dust, and oral intake of fresh
or dried faeces, or crop secretions3. Viral replication within the mouth, oesophagus,
crop, intestines, bursa of fabricius, and liver can result in viral contamination of
faeces4. Vertical transmission and fomite spread are also possible so artificial
incubation of eggs does not prevent infection of chicks from infected parents. A
similar syndrome has been reported in columbiformes, attributed to a similar but
antigenically distinct circovirus5.
The virus targets dividing cells with initial replication occurring in the bursa
and gastrointestinal lymphoid tissue, and secondary replication in the liver, thymus
and other organs. The epidermis is selectively affected due to high cell activity, with
damage predominantly seen in the dividing cells in developing feathers. Clinical
disease following infection with this virus is only seen in psittacines; most commonly
budgerigars, lorikeets, lories, Eclectus and African Grey Parrots. It is suspected that
Cockatoos may be common carriers of the virus, only showing signs when
immunocompromised with concurrent infection, particularly Chlamydophila or
reovirus5.
[Figure 1]
Disease course is very variable, depending on age at infection, maternal antibody
protection, viral challenge and immune status. Four categories of disease are
recognised, differentiated by clinical signs and the age of bird affected:
1. Acute
This is seen in newly hatched birds, most commonly grey parrots6,7. Sudden
death or severe, rapidly fatal pneumonia, enteritis or acute hepatitis are seen. There
are no pathognomonic gross post-mortem signs.
Older nestlings up to a months old present as systemically ill, with nonspecific signs. Anorexia, regurgitation, lethargy, diarrhoea and secondary infections
are commonly seen. The feathers may be affected, with loss of powder down,
malformation, fracture and colour changes. Unlike the chronic form, all feathers can
be affected in a short period of time. Leucopaenia and anaemia may also occur, but
leucocyte numbers can show dramatic variation over a 24 hour period so a normal
count does not exclude disease5.
At post-mortem there are often signs of anaemia, hepatopathy and secondary
infections, especially aspergillosis and enteric bacterial infections. High levels of
virus can be isolated from the liver. Birds may recover from this acute clinical phase
and become chronically infected.
3. Chronic
This usually affects birds of 8 months to 3yrs, and is the most common stage
to be presented in general practice. There is a typical progressive feather loss and
deformity. Manifestation of the feather disease only occurs with a moult so may not
be evident for many months. Dystrophic feathers gradually begin to replace normal
ones as they are moulted. Symmetrical feather loss or changes are seen, usually
starting with the tail feathers, and growing feathers become curved, clubbed and prone
to breakage. Damaged blood feathers lead to haemorrhage.
[Figure 2]
Dystrophic feathers may be short with fault lines across the vanes, thickened
or retained feather sheaths, haemorrhage and annular constriction of the calamus or
curling5.
[Figure 3]
Eclectus parrots may only show delayed moulting and poor quality feathering6.
Pulviplumes (down feathers) are consistently moulted so are often the first feathers to
show signs. They become fragile or develop an abnormally thickened outer sheath
that fails to disintegrate to produce normal powder down. The failure of production of
this powder down leads to a dull plumage and a glossy beak5.
[Figure 4]
In later stages the beak and claws may become very brittle with a necrotic
layer under the superficial horn. Transverse or longitudinal cracks or fractures, or
delaminations can occur. In severe cases, necrosis of the beak, oral epithelium and
progressive osteomyelitis can cause the beak to slough5. Beak changes are a
prominent feature of disease in cockatoos6. Severe beak involvement is a very painful
condition and euthanasia should be considered.
On the limbs, hyperkeratosis can cause skin to become prominently scaled and
thickened. Chronic ulceration occsaionally occurs in the skin overlying the elbows
and wing tips.
[Figure 5]
Lovebirds may present with minimal feather changes and large crusting skin
lesions, particularly in the periorbital region, that must be differentiated from mite and
pox infections5.
Secondary infections are common, including parasitic, bacterial and mycotic
proliferation due to the related immunosuppression5. At post-mortem the bursa may
be difficult to locate, the liver appears enlarged and pale with necrotic foci and
splenomegaly is often noted8.
4. Subclinical form
This is seen in older birds, particularly budgies, cockatiels and cockatoos. Virus is
shed asymptomatically, contaminating the environment and infecting other birds.
These birds typically show no clinical signs but may be predisposed to repeated mild
secondary infections and can progress to the chronic disease status. They act as a
continuing source of infection to other birds.
[Figure 6]
A PCR test on blood can be used to detect the viral DNA. However, as the
virus circulates within leucocytes in the blood, clinical cases with profound
leucopaenia may test negative. For this reason, the preferred sample for viral DNA
detection is feather pulp9. However, tissue samples must be taken aseptically to avoid
potential environmental circovirus contamination. False negatives can occur as not all
feathers are involved, and atypical strains of circovirus may not be picked up by
standard tests. Tissue samples from the thymus, bursa, bone marrow and liver should
be collected at post-mortem of any suspected cases and submitted for PCR analysis.
A positive PCR result does not confirm active infection as non-replicating
viral DNA may take up to 3 months to clear from the bloodstream. Retesting of live
birds after 90 days is recommended if results are positive but there are no clinical
signs. If the bird is still positive then this indicates that the bird is either subclinically
infected or is being repeatedly exposed to the virus. Concurrent histopathological
examination of feather material can help differentiate active and latent infection10.
Histological examination of feather biopsies demonstrates large, granular
basophilic intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies, particularly in macrophages and
keratinocytes, and intranuclear inclusion bodies in epithelial cells11,12. Examination of
the bursa shows inclusions, necrosis of lymphoid follicles, medullary cysts and
haemorrhage. Immunoperoxidase staining can be used to confirm diagnosis13. There
may be no histopathological changes in birds incubating PBFD, or in subclinical
carriers.
[Figure 7]
A variant of psittacine circovirus (a virus termed PsCV 2) has been documented as the
cause of feather dystrophy in a group of lories. Sequence analysis confirms that PsCV
2 has sufficient nucleic acid differences that it is not detected using standard
laboratory PBFDV DNA detection tests. If a feather biopsy taken from a psittacine
contains characteristic inclusion bodies but the blood PCR test is negative for PBFDV
nucleic acid, then the blood sample could be retested using a less specific circovirus
DNA assay to test for PsCV2. Microscopic lesions in affected lories were less severe
than those seen with PBFDV. There are reports that 40% of wild lorikeets recover
within two moults and captive bred lorikeets have been reported to spontaneously
recover from this virus.5 Although PsCV2 can be cleared by lories and lorikeets it
causes chronic progressive PBFD like disease in other psittacines with no resolution.
Therapy for PBFD is unsuccessful and chronically infected birds usually die
within four years, from secondary infections. Small numbers of infected birds have
survived up to fifteen years in a featherless state.
Sick birds within collections should be euthanased due to pain associated with
beak and claw changes, psychological distress and trauma potential in birds rendered
flightless, and transmission risk. In multi-bird households or breeding situations
euthanasia of birds consistently testing positive, regardless of clinical status, should
be a serious consideration. Virus-infected birds with feather abnormalities shed large
concentrations of virus in their feather dust, which can be easily carried to other birds
by the wind or by personnel. All areas, supplies and equipment that could potentially
be contaminated with feather dust should be repeatedly cleaned and disinfected, using
glutaraldehyde products10. Clinically affected single pet birds can be treated
supportively with vitamin A and probiotics, with antibiotic/antifungal treatment as
necessary for secondary infections as long as the bird is able to maintain a good
quality of life. Autogenous vaccines, immunoglobulin injections and immunotherapy
may help for short periods but most are not commercially available in the UK5.
Prevention involves good hygiene, with testing and quarantine of any new
birds in disease free collections. New birds should be tested and positive cases
retested after 90d to see if virus has been eliminated or if the first sample may have
been contaminated. Carrier birds may appear clinically normal but produce diseased
young, hence it is sensible in commercial situations to breed birds in quarantine.
Persistent positives must be kept in isolation or culled. PBFD is impossible to control
with quarantine alone due to the variation in incubation length and the existence of
subclinical infection.
Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease is an important disease of parrots, which
is presented relatively frequently in general practice but often remains unrecognised.
Prompt diagnosis is important as it is a fatal disease process but also highly infectious,
risking contamination of both the keepers facility and the veterinary practice. Viral
particles remain viable, and pose an infectious risk, for at least two years. Many
laboratories now offer screening tests, and screening for this and other infectious
diseases should be discussed with new owners, particularly where a new bird is to be
introduced into a household or collection with other psittacines.
Acknowledgements
Photographs provided by Neil Forbes BVetMed DipECAMS CBiol MIBiol FRCVS,
Great Western Referrals and Mark Stidworthy MA VetMB PhD MRCPath MRCVS,
International Zoo Vet Group Pathology. Additional thanks to Neil Forbes and Minh
Huynh DVM MRCVS for proof-reading and assistance.
References available on request from the author.
Figure 1
Loss of feather cover and progressive abnormal colouration of feathers in an African
Grey
Figure 2
Clubbing of feathers in an Umbrella cockatoo
Figure 3
Fret bars across tail feathers
Figure 4
Loss of powder down, distortion and elongation of beak
Figure 5
Hyperkeratosis and hyperpigmentation in cockatoo, caused by PBFD (left), normal
cockatoo foot for comparison (right)
Feather changes
Polyoma virus
Self-mutilation
Hepatic dysfunction
Systemic disease
Polyfolliculitis (lovebirds)
Physical feather damage
Heavy metal toxicity
Amino acid deficiency
Skin changes
Bacterial dermatitis
Fungal dermatitis
Traumatic injury
Knemidokoptes infestation
Pox virus
Self-mutilation
Polyfolliculitis
Sudden death in juveniles
Immunosuppression
Bacterial septicaemia
Proventricular Dilation Syndrome Hypo/hyperthermia
Systemic Disease
Clostridial enteritis
Malnutrition
Pacheco's Disease
Chronic stress
Polyoma virus
Psittacosis (Chlamydophila)
Salmonellosis
Pacheco's Disease
Congential abnormality
All chronic infections
Trauma
Toxicity
HPAI
Figure 6
Differential Diagnoses for PBFD symptoms
Figure 7
Section through feather follicle demonstrating basophilic intracytoplasmic inclusion
bodies.
References
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